Even thought I can press "<tt>c</tt>" to switch directory if I want to execute a command in the directory that I am viewing with the explorer.vim plugin, but sometimes I don't want to actually change to that directory to execute it because I want to remain in whatever directory I am in such as a root directory of source files. So I opened up explorer.vim to see if I can add it directly to the plugin, but I found out that it can call a variable <tt>g:explFileHandler</tt> that stores the user defined function whenever the key '<tt>x</tt>' is pressed on a file or directory. So I used that to implement executing a command in the viewing directory in my vimrc as follows:

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Even thought I can press "<code>c</code>" to switch directory if I want to execute a command in the directory that I am viewing with the explorer.vim plugin, but sometimes I don't want to actually change to that directory to execute it because I want to remain in whatever directory I am in such as a root directory of source files. So I opened up explorer.vim to see if I can add it directly to the plugin, but I found out that it can call a variable <code>g:explFileHandler</code> that stores the user defined function whenever the key '<code>x</code>' is pressed on a file or directory. So I used that to implement executing a command in the viewing directory in my vimrc as follows:

Even thought I can press "c" to switch directory if I want to execute a command in the directory that I am viewing with the explorer.vim plugin, but sometimes I don't want to actually change to that directory to execute it because I want to remain in whatever directory I am in such as a root directory of source files. So I opened up explorer.vim to see if I can add it directly to the plugin, but I found out that it can call a variable g:explFileHandler that stores the user defined function whenever the key 'x' is pressed on a file or directory. So I used that to implement executing a command in the viewing directory in my vimrc as follows: